One last question lingered in my mind, and I had no reservations about blurting it out. |
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Of course, political necessity prevented the president from blurting the awkward truth that the nation is already running near-record deficits. |
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Yet there I was in thick make-up and bad costumes, willingly standing on the stage and blurting my few lines. |
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I'm going to loft an idea here and I don't want to prejudice your thinking by blurting out any names. |
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Or was he just, in the excitement of the moment, blurting out his real views? |
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In fact, he was guilty of blurting out finance's embarrassing secret: that he was trapped in a dance he could not quit. |
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She brushes past him, her heart pounding with the effort it took to keep from blurting out something about Daphne that would really cut him to the quick. |
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But blurting out some truths may obscure others. |
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This could include blurting out answers to questions before the question is even finished or actions that are dangerous, like not waiting for the light to change before crossing the street. |
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John Major has been blurting out the bitterness he feels towards Margaret Thatcher, who passed him the torch in 1990 but then gave succour to the Europhobic rebels, including Mr Duncan Smith, who made his life a misery. |
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They're forever blurting out words that wound when they don't mean to. |
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